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This presentation provides an overview of the role and function of the Financial and Fiscal Commission (FFC) in analyzing the health budget. It also discusses the mandate and strategic goals of the Department of Health, as well as the department's performance plans and budget analysis. The presentation concludes with remarks on the current challenges and goals in the health sector.
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Briefing to the Portfolio Committee on Health For an Equitable Sharing of National Revenue Financial and Fiscal Commission 13 October 2015
Presentation Outline • Role and Function of the Financial and Fiscal Commission • Mandate and Strategic Overview of the Department of Health • Overview of the Department of Health performance plans • Departmental Analysis • Budget analysis and Performance • Concluding Remarks
Role and Function of the FFC • The Financial and Fiscal Commission (FFC) • Is an independent, permanent, statutory institution established in terms of Section 220 of Constitution • Must function in terms of the FFC Act • Mandate of Commission • To make recommendations, envisaged in Chapter 13 of the Constitution or in national legislation to Parliament, Provincial Legislatures, and any other organ of state determined by national legislation • The Commission’s focus is primarily on the equitable division of nationally collected revenue among the three spheres of government and any other financial and fiscal matters • Legislative provisions or executive decisions that affect either provincial or local government from a financial and/or fiscal perspective • Includes regulations associated with legislation that may amend or extend such legislation • Commission must be consulted in terms of the FFC Act • Current research strategy focuses on developmental impacts of IGFR
Mandate and Strategic Overview of the Department • Mandate: To provide a framework for a structured uniform health system. In order to achieve healthy life for all, health is government’s second priority on the outcome based delivery model • Department’s five year strategic goals: • Prevent and reduce burden of disease and promote health • Improve health facility planning by implementing norms and standards • Improve financial management by improving: capacity, contract management, revenue collection and supply chain management • Develop efficient health management information system for improved decision making
Mandate and Strategic Overview of the Department Cont… • Improve quality of care by setting norms and monitoring thereof, improve system for user feedback, increase safety in health care and improving clinical governance • Re-engineer Primary Health Care (PHC) through strengthening of district health system • Make progress towards universal health coverage through National Insurance (NHI) and improve readiness health facilities for its implementation
Strategic Overview of the Ndoh Alignment with NDP Goals • National Development Plan Goals: Alignment with Department of Health Strategic Goals • Average male and female life expectancy at birth 70 years: Corresponds to Goal 1 of NDoH strategic goals • TB prevalence and cure progressive improved: Goal1 of NDoH • Maternal, infant and child mortality reduced: Goal 1 of NDoH • Prevalence of non communicable disease reduced: Goal 1 of NDoH • Injury, accidents and violence reduced by 50% from 2010 level: Goal 1 of NDoH • Health systems reforms improved: Goals 2,3,4 and 5 of NDoH • PHC team deployed to provide care to families and communities: Goal 6 of NDoH • Universal health coverage achieved: Goal 7 • Posts filled with skilled, committed and competent individuals: Goal 8
Overview of Department of Health Performance Plans • Department of health seeks to achieve these strategic outputs: • Increase life expectancy i.e. life expectancy to 70 years by 2030 • Reduction in maternal and child mortality rates i.e. from 310/1000 to 270/100 in 2014; infant mortality from 40/1000 to 36/1000 in 2014 and under five mortality from 56/1000 to 50/1000 in 2014 • Combating HIV/AIDS and decreasing burden of disease from TB and • Strengthening health systems effectiveness i.e. strengthening the PHC, improvements on health infrastructure and human resources as well as financing through NHI
Overview of Department of Health Performance Plans Cont... • South Africa’s Health Outcomes remains below the national set targets despite efforts to transform the health system into an integrated and comprehensive system including significant amount of investment and expenditure in the sector • Challenges related to poor quality of public health care, ineffective and inefficient health system and documented institutional failures (FFC 2014, Chapter 5) • Increasing maternal and mortality rate due to among other things HIV/AIDS • Health costs are spiralling
Budget Analysis Overview • The Commission provides a three year backward looking and three year forward looking analysis of departmental budgets • compare allocations and performance by: vote/programme/subprogramme/province • Nominal versus Real growth rates • Real figures/growth rates takes inflation into consideration • Variances and explanations ( investigate reasons /drivers of change) • Spending by economic classification
Budget Programmes of the Department of Health • Total Budget increased from R33 955.5 billion in 2014/15 to R36 468.0 billion in 2015/16 • Programme 1 Administration increased from R399.7 million in 2014/15 to R457.1 million in 2015/16 • Overall management and support services • Programme 2 – National Health Insurance, Health Planning and Systems Enablement decreased from R491.9 million in 2014/15 to R587.8 million in 2015/16 • Health financing reform, integrated health system planning, monitoring and evaluation as well as research • Programme 3 – HIV/AIDS, TB and Maternal and Child health increased from R13.049 in 2014/15 to R14.442 billion in 2015/16 • Coordinate and fund health programmes for HIV/AIDS, TB, maternal and child health
Budget Programmes of the Department of Health Cont… • Programme 4 – Primary Health Care Services decreased from R93.5 million in 2014/15 to R225 million in 2015/16 • Develop and oversee legislation and policies , norms and standards for a uniform district health system • Programme 5 – Hospitals , Tertiary Health Services and Human Resource Development increased from R18 925.8 billion in 2014/15 to R19 159.1 billion in 2015/16 • Develop policies for hospital and emergency medical services including aligning academic medical centres with workforce programmes as well as ensuring planning of health infrastructure meets the needs of the economy • Programme 6– Health Regulation and Compliance Management increased from R865.3 million in 2014/15 to R1 596 billion in 2015/16 • Regulate the procurement of medicines and health technology and promote accountability and compliance
Expenditure Composition by Economic Classification – 2015/16
Budget and Expenditure Analysis • 92% of budget is transfers and subsidies which increased by 2% from 2013/14 • Provinces and Municipalities • Higher education institutions • Compensation of employees at 2.3%% with slight decrease at 3% in 2013/14 • Payment for capital assets at 1.8% slight increase from 1% from 2014/15 • Budget driven by Programme 3 and 5 – HIV/AIDS and Hospitals, Tertiary services and Human Resource Development at 92.1% in 2014/15
Variance Explanation • Aggregate spending performance for the six programmes is at 98% in 2014/15 almost similar to 2013/14 at 97.7% • Programme 1 Administration there is 100% in 2014/15 compared to 10% under expenditure in 2013/14 • Programme 2 – National Health Insurance, Health Planning and Systems under expenditure (50%) in 2014/15 compared to about 60% in 2013/14 due to slow take off on the NHI indirect grant and difficulties in contracting private general practitioners due to poor working conditions • Programme 3 – HIV/AIDS, TB and Maternal and Child health shows a slight under expenditure (0.5%) in 2014/15 compared to 0.7% in 2013/14 due to among other things challenges related to distribution of condoms
Variance Explanation Cont… • Programme 4 – Primary Health Care Services Administration shows over expenditure of about (7%) in 2014/15 due to NHI reforms compared to under expenditure (12.6%) in 2013/14 • Programme 5 – Hospitals , Tertiary Health Services and Human Resource Development there is under expenditure of (2%) in 2014/15 compared to (1.4%) in 2013/14 due to incomplete infrastructure projects, orders not received on time (e.g. laboratories) and reduction in budget due to slow spending • Programme 6– Health Regulation and Compliance Management displays over expenditure of (2%) in 2014/15 compared to under expenditure (4.1%) in 2013/14 due to setting and establishment of among other things Office of the Standards Compliance which would be a public entity
Conditional Grant Analysis • The overall aggregate spending for health grants for the year 2013/14 is about 96% compared to 2012/13 at 85% • There has been improvement in expenditure in all the grants except for the Health Facility Revitalization at 85% • Some of the reasons attributable to under spending are: • Poor project management, • delays in supply chain management processes • The FFC has cautioned in the past against the merging of grants especially those that are under performing without underlying performance data
Budget and Expenditure Analysis • Provincial growth rate has been unstable over the years under the analysis where for transfers and subsidies it moved from 60% in 2012/13 to negative growth rates of 7% in 2013/14 • In 2013/14 there has been relative under expenditure by the provincial departments except in two provinces where there was relatively over expenditure • On provincial programmes there has been unstable growth path as per the analysis and for the year 2014/15 negative growth rate were recorded in all programmes
Health Policy Issues – NHLS • NHLS reforms have resulted in reduction of PES and HIV/AIDS Grant baseline • R1.7 billion over the 2015/16 MTEF • Provinces benefited from tariff reduction of 3.9% and savings on budget • NHLS is currently undergoing reforms to address a number of operational inefficiencychallenges • A new costing model have been developed • Addressing inefficiency could reduce the tariffs
Health Policy Issues – NHI • The Department of Health recently held consultative meeting with the Commission on the progress with NHI and White Paper process • Spending on NHI pilot grants is improving but remains lower than initial allocation • Grant baselines have been reduced drastically due to underspending. • NHI implementation is still constrained by supply chain, staffing and delegation problems • NHI requires supplement fund from PES but most provinces are unable to do so due to fiscal constraint
Concluding Remarks • Significant progress has been made in meeting outcome targets set for 2014 • Health conditional grants spending is improving except on infrastructure related grants • The Infrastructure Development Act (2014) and the establishment of Presidential Infrastructure Coordination Commission can assist solving the infrastructure related projects/problems faced by the sector • Provinces exhibit general under expenditure on health except two provinces with over expenditure • Unstable growth paths on provincial programmes which recorded negative growth rates is worrying given the NHI reforms currently taking place in the sector
FFC’s Website: www.ffc.co.za Introduction to the Financial and Fiscal Commission 2014 FFC MTBPS Training for SCoA_September 2014